Kosovo, the European Union's new colony




Mary Mostert 

 <http://www.renewamerica.us/columns/mostert> Mary Mostert
March 7, 2008


My first reaction to media reports on February 16 of jubilant Albanians in
Kosovo gleefully celebrating their "independence" from Serbia was simple
bewilderment. In the first place, I noted from pictures of their jubilation
(http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23203607/) that they are not waving a Kosovo
flag. What they wave is the flag of Albania.

Secondly, according to the Kosovo Plan
(http://www.unosek.org/unosek/en/statusproposal.html) developed by Marti
Athtisaari,former president of Finland and the United Nations special envoy
to Kosovo,their independence requires that "Kosovo must uphold, promote and
protect internationally recognized human rights and fundamental freedoms.
All persons in Kosovo are entitled to these rights and freedoms without
discrimination of any kind."

History proves that Albanians simply don't recognize the rights and freedoms
of others. In fact, when Albania declared itself an "atheist state" in 1967,
all churches and other buildings owned by religious groups were closed down.
In an article published April 1, 1999 I reported that over 166,000 Greeks
were driven out of Albania between 1993 and 1997 From 1991 to 2000 the
percentage of Greeks in Albania dropped from 8% of the population to 3% of
the population. In Kosovo the Serb population dropped from almost 15% of the
population in 1981 to 5% of the population in 2007.

The Kosovo Albanians waving an Albania flag is exactly comparable to illegal
alien high school students in California ripping down the US flag and
raising the flag of Mexico at their school. They justify their behavior by
claiming that California is really a part of Mexico. In Kosovo, Albanians
that have flooded across the open borders between Kosovo and Albania are now
claiming that Kosovo is really part of Albania. Actually, Kosovo has never
been part of Albania, except during World War II when it was overrun by then
fascist Italy that had also occupied Albania. California was part of Mexico
until the treaty of Guadalupe of 1847 when it ceded California, Texas and
New Mexico (including all the present-day states of the Southwest) to the
United States in exchange for the US withdrawing its troops from Mexico
City.

Kosovo, on the other hand, has been the home of Serbs for more than a
thousand years and part of the nation of Serbia for for 700 years although
it has been occupied by other nations a number of times. The latest
occupation has been the 9 year occupation by NATO troops.

And, like every other state or province within nations, Kosovo had its own
budget and its own debt. During these nine years of occupation by a foreign
power, Serbia has continued to service that debt, although it has received
no taxes from Kosovo during the NATO occupation. Belgrade has been paying
$150 million a YEAR to service Kosovo's debt. That compares with less than
$20 million a year the World Bank has given to Kosovo from 1999-2006. (A
week ago Serbia's Economy Minister Mladjan Dinkic wisely urged his
government to stop paying Kosovo's debts
(http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSL2637230220080226) as long as
it is occupied by NATO and the European Union.) The World Bank reports that
since June of 1999 over $2.57 BILLION dollars has been spent trying to
rebuild Kosovo and make a modern, viable state out of it.

In spite of all that money, the World Bank reports that growth in Kosovo
"has weakened from 21.2% in 2000 to 4.2% in 2006 in line with declining
donor resources." As the Serbs and other minorities have been ethnically
cleansed from Kosovo due to crime and violence that KFOR seemed to be unable
or unwilling to control, unemployment has skyrocketed to a reported 50-70%
of the workforce.

The English word independent, in my dictionary is defined as: (1) Not
influenced or controlled by others in matters of opinion, conduct, etc; (2)
Not subject to another's authority or jurisdiction (3) Not relying on
another or others for aid or support (4) declining others' aid or support;
refusing to be under obligation to others.

That does not define Kosovo. It is clearly dependent on outside money and
even outside policing to keep it reasonably in line. How is it that the
Albanians in Kosovo with such non-productive background even SURVIVE — much
less be granted such favor by the international community that it is being
recognized as an "independent nation?"

Actually, the answer to that is in Albanian past and present history. Piracy
and illegal trading has been part of Albania's economy for hundreds of
years. According to an article by Peter Klebnikov in the February 2000
edition of Mother Jones Magazine, which strongly favors legalizing currently
illegal drugs, most of the illegal drugs consumed in Europe
(http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/2000/01/heroin.html) are supplied
by Albanian crime "families."Klebnikov wrote: "in the six months since
Washington enthroned the Kosovo Liberation Army in that Yugoslav province,
KLA-associated drug traffickers have cemented their influence and used their
new status to increase heroin trafficking and forge links with other
nationalist rebel groups and drug cartels.

"The ascent of the Kosovar families to the top of the trafficking hierarchy
coincided with the sudden appearance of the KLA as a fighting force in 1997.
As Serbia unleashed its campaign of persecution against ethnic Albanians,
the diaspora mobilized. Hundreds of thousands of expatriate Kosovars around
the world funneled money to the insurrection. Nobody sent more than the
Kosovar drug traffickers — some of the wealthiest people of Kosovar
extraction in Europe. According to news reports, Kosovar Albanian
traffickers launder $1.5 billion in profits from drug and arms smuggling
each year through a shadowy network of some 200 private banks and currency
exchange offices."

That was more than eight years ago. The "Serbia persecution" mentioned by
Klebnikov was a effort by Belgrade to stop the killing of Serb policemen.
Time marches on. Today the man who headed Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) in
2000, Hashim Thaci, is the prime minister of Kosovo. Until President Bill
Clinton removed it in 1999, the KLA was on the U.S. State Department list of
terrorist organizations.

In February 1999 I also wrote about what I could see was a puzzling
situation then developing in Kosovo. Frankly, at the time I knew nothing
about the area but did know that the Albanians were the poorest, most
backward and most devotedly communist nation in all of Europe. They thought
the Russians were not proper "communists." I wondered how they could afford
to create an army and finance expensive modern weapons to challenge the
Yugoslavian army.

This was more than 2 years before the terrorist attacks on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon, but even then in that article
(http://www.bannerofliberty.com/OS2-99MQC/2-24-1999.1.html) I had tracked
down connections between the KLA and Osama bin Laden. I observed: "The KLA
actually is the successor to the Ustashi regime of World War II which
slaughtered over 700,000 Serbs, Jews, and Gypsies living in Croat-controlled
territory in the forgotten part of the Holocaust. They have hated the Serbs
for several hundred years — the Serbs supported the Allies in World War II
and the Ustashi supported Mussolini and Adolph Hitler."

According to the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime the global drug
trade generated an estimated $321.6 billion in 2003. That compares with the
$358.2 billion that was spent in the 2003 US Defense Department budget. The
size of the world's illicit drug trade,
(http://www.csdp.org/news/news/reut_un05_062905.htm) which fuels much of
world terrorism and crime, is equivalent to .9% of the world's entire GDP
and higher than the GDP of 88 percent of the countries in the world.

When the Albanians declared Kosovo "independent" the Serbs also gathered. In
fact, their leaders — traditional, elected and spiritual, gathered to pray
for the survival and the well being of the Serbs in Kosovo, most of whom
have already been either driven out of Kosovo or killed in recent years.
Crown Prince Alexander II addressed the gathered Serbs
(http://www.bannerofliberty.com/BOL-2008HL/3-4-2008.1.html) at Saint Dmitri
Church in Mitrovica, Kosovo as follows: "Peace, determination, decisiveness,
faith, and goodwill — these are our only 'weapons.' And, of course, law and
justice, which are on our side. I appeal for the respect of human rights.

"Once again, I repeat my appeal for unity, for wisdom, for the unity of all
politicians leading Serbia at this grave hour, so that we can live up to our
ancestors who created this country with great effort, and our successors, to
whom we must leave this country in legacy."

On one hand we are told that all the problems in the Balkans will simply go
away when a "new" nation created by and for terrorists, drug dealers and
criminals is recognized by other nations as legitimate and can join the
United Nations. On the other hand we have the old nation of Serbia that is
praying for the survival of the small group of Serbs still remaining in
Kosovo.

I can hardly wait to see what happens next.

  _____  

Mary Mostert is a nationally-respected political writer. She was one of the
first female political commentators to be published in a major metropolitan
newspaper in the 1960s. After working in President Lyndon Johnson's failed
War on Poverty programs in New York state, she became a Republican. She ran,
unsuccessfully, for the New York State Senate and became campaign manager
for a number of candidates. She once served as the secretary of "Positive
Action NOW!"--a South African women's group that sought to reduce the
hostility among South Africa's various racial, religious, and political
groups.

In recent years, Mary has researched, written, and edited articles for
national talk show host Michael Reagan's Information Interchange on the
Internet, and for The REAGAN MONITOR, a monthly newsletter that provides
in-depth information on key issues. Her book, COMING HOME - Families Can
Stop the Unraveling of America," was published in 1996 by Gold Leaf Press.
Mary maintains a political media site, Banner
<http://www.bannerofliberty.com/>  of Liberty. She can be contacted at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> . Click here
<http://www.renewamerica.us/columns/mostert/mostert.htm>  for more
information.

© Copyright 2008 by Mary Mostert
http://www.renewamerica.us/columns/mostert/080307

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